Tits system
A collection , where
is a group,
and
are subgroups and
is a subset of
, satisfying the following conditions: 1) the set
generates the group
; 2)
is a normal subgroup of
; 3) the set
generates the group
and consists of elements of order 2; 4)
for all
,
; and 5)
for
. The group
, called the Weyl group of the Tits system
, is a Coxeter group with respect to the system of generators
. The correspondence
is a bijection from
onto the set of double cosets of
in
.
Examples. a) , where
is any field,
is the subgroup of upper triangular matrices,
is the subgroup of monomial matrices (so that
is the subgroup of diagonal matrices and
, cf. Monomial matrix), and
is the set of transpositions
, where
.
b) More generally, let be a connected reductive algebraic group over
, let
be a maximal torus in
diagonalizable over
, let
be its normalizer, let
be its centralizer, let
be the root system of
relative to
, let
be its Weyl group, and let
be the set of reflections corresponding to the simple roots. Moreover, let
be the unipotent subgroup of
generated by the root subgroups corresponding to the positive roots, and let
. Then the quadruple
is a Tits system.
c) Let , where
is the field of
-adic numbers, let
be the subgroup consisting of matrices
(where
is the ring of
-adic integers), such that
for
, and let
be the subgroup of monomial matrices. Then there exists a subset
such that the quadruple
is a Tits system. Here the group
is an infinite Coxeter group of type
. Analogously one can define Tits systems with Weyl groups of affine type corresponding to other connected reductive groups over local fields.
Under certain conditions one can assert that a group admitting a Tits system is simple. For example, the following conditions are sufficient for this:
)
is a solvable group, and is not contained in any proper normal subgroup of
;
)
is equal to its own commutator subgroup;
) the Coxeter group
is indecomposable; or
) the group
does not contain any non-trivial normal subgroup of
. In this way one can prove the simplicity of the Chevalley groups, in particular of the finite ones (cf. Chevalley group).
References
[1] | J. Tits, "Buildings of spherical type and finite BN-pairs" , Lect. notes in math. , 386 , Springer (1974) |
[2] | N. Bourbaki, "Elements of mathematics. Lie groups and Lie algebras" , Addison-Wesley (1975) pp. Chapt. 4 (Translated from French) |
Comments
A Tits system is also called a group with a -pair.
Let be a
-transitive permutation group on the set
; then
and
, where
is a permutation in
interchanging
and
,
and
. This gives a Tits system of type
.
References
[a1] | M.A. Ronan, "Lectures on buildings" , Acad. Press (1989) |
Tits system. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Tits_system&oldid=11480